by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
All throughout his new book, The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in America,
David A. Stockman is critical of the Chicago School, especially its
intellectual leader during the last half of the twentieth century,
Milton Friedman. He captures
the irony of the so-called free-market Chicago School on the very first
page of his introduction, where he writes of the “capture of the state,
especially
its central bank, the Federal Reserve, by crony capitalist forces deeply
inimical to free markets and democracy.”
This is a deep irony because it was Chicago School economists such as
George Stigler who wrote of the “capture theory of regulation” when it
came to the
trucking industry, the airline industry, and many others. That is, they
produced dozens of scholarly articles demonstrating how government
regulatory
agencies ostensibly created to regulate industry “in the public
interest” are most often “captured” by the industry itself and then used
not to protect the
public but to enforce cartel pricing arrangements.